Math Reviewer
Math Reviewer
Math Reviewer
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 I nt ro d uc tion
How to Use this eBook 3
About Us 4
Why Our Students Love Us 5
Math Formulas: How to (Not) Use Them 6
Takeaway 7
4 Algeb ra
Simplifying Expressions 17
Factoring 17
Solving Equations 18
Function Notation 19
Inequalities 19
Practice Questions 20
5 G eom etr y
Angles 22
Polygons 22
Triangles 22
Parallelograms 23
Trapezoids 24
TABLE OF CONTENTS
3-D Shapes 24
Circles 24
Practice Questions 25
8 Counting
Fundamental Counting Principle 35
Approach to a Counting Problem 35
Factorial Notation 35
Restrictions 35
Combinations 35
Permutations 35
Practice Questions 36
9 Prob ab ilit y
Probability of Event A 38
Events A & B (if Independent Events) 38
Events A & B (if Dependent Events) 38
Probability of Shaded Regions 38
Practice Questions 39
10 R esources
Resources 41
Score Higher 42
INTRODUCTION
How to Use this eB o ok
T
To return to
the Table of his ebook is a study tool that combines all the math formulas that you’ll need to
Contents,
know for the SAT in one handy place. If a math concept is tested on the SAT, you’ll
just click the
check! find any relevant formulas here, along with helpful tips for using the formula quickly
and accurately.
In addition to formulas, we’ve also included some excerpts from the Magoosh SAT blog.
They provide relevant study strategies and time-saving tips. And don’t forget to use our
practice problems to quiz yourself along the way!
You’ll also notice there are tabs along the top of the page. You can use these tabs to move
between the book’s main sections. For example, if you need to brush up on your number
properties, just click the number properties tab at the top of the page and—voilà—you are in
the number properties section! Done with number properties, and want to try some algebra?
Just click the algebra tab and you’re there! No scrolling required.
Powers
Introduction Algebra Geometry
& Roots
NUMBER PROPERTIES
Number Powers
Introduction Geometry
Properties & Roots
ALGEBRA
Basically, we want you to think of this eBook not only as a formula cheat-sheet, but also as a
great reference for all SAT math topics that you can use at any stage of your study process.
We hope that it’s helpful and informative! If you have any questions, comments, or sugges-
tions, please feel free to leave us a comment on our blog!
INTRODUCTION
Ab o u t Us
Featured in:
INTRODUCTION
Wh at St ud ent s S ay Ab out M ago o sh
“It has given me great preparation for hard questions on the SAT. It’s an amazing way to prac-
tice hard questions that you rarely find, and the answer explanations are amazing.”
“Unlike others out there, Magoosh has all the helpful, easy-to-comprehend video lessons. It
helps a lot just by watching them.”
“I loved the videos and all the practice questions. The practice questions are all at (what I
feel is) a harder level which really helped with level 4 and 5 type questions on the SAT. I have
improved my English grammar skills significantly and excelled through lots of the practice
questions. I also really love the videos at the end of each question. (: “
“Magoosh has not only helped me refresh for my upcoming test but also taught me some
cool new tricks for quickly solving problems in all subjects. I would recommend Magoosh to
anyone who wants to feel confident on the day of their test. “
“I used the product to prepare me for taking the SAT and even though I had taken it before, I
was still very much informed on many things I did not know about the test. “
Th e M a g o osh Team
INTRODUCTION
S AT M at h Form ulas: How to (No t) Use Them
While formulas can be really helpful on the SAT, there are very, very few that you absolutely
need to have memorized to score well. That might come as a surprise, but it’s true, and it
leads us to an important thought: understanding how and why a formula works is as useful
as rote memorization. In fact, it’s much better. You’ll have a better sense of when to use a for-
mula and be more accurate in executing it if you understand the math behind it. Let’s look at
a concrete case to illustrate. The distance formula is a prime example. It’s ugly…
…but it actually represents a pretty simple idea. If you have any two points on a graph (on
the coordinate plane), you can make a right triangle that connects those two points as the
ends of the hypotenuse. That is, you draw a diagonal line between the two points, then a
straight horizontal line and a straight vertical line going through each point to make the legs
of the triangle.
leg
leg
hypotenuse
Then, since you’re trying to find the length of the hypotenuse, you just use the Pythagorean
theorem:
a2 + b2 = c2
(Notice that a couple very basic formulas like this one do need to be memorized.) The lengths
of those legs are a and b, and the length of the hypotenuse is c.
c2 = a2 + b2
c = a2 + b2
And if you’re trying to find the length of the legs (the shorter sides), you just need to know
the horizontal distance between the two points, x 2 – x 1, and the vertical distance between
the two points, y2 – y1. If you replace a and b with those values, voilà: you have the distance
formula.
INTRODUCTION
Additionally, relying on formulas too much can also give us formula blindness. That is, even
though we’ve remembered a formula, we try to apply it to a problem even when the prob-
lem is asking for something different. The reason students often fall into this trap is because
a question may use language that is similar to the language they'd expect for using a certain
formula.
Once you’ve memorized the formulas in this eBook, you should practice them on relevant
problems so that applying the formulas becomes natural. You should also be aware of when
the formula doesn’t completely apply. Or when you find a way to solve the problem without
the formula, that’s even better—just in case you happen to forget a formula on test day.
Ta ke away
Ultimately, the SAT is testing the way you think. And simply plugging in a bunch of values
to a set formula doesn’t test thinking skills insomuch as it tests your ability to memorize a
formula. Besides, trying to memorize a formula is often more difficult than knowing how that
formula was derived. Nevertheless, before walking into the SAT, it is a good idea to know the
following formulas and concepts. In fact, ignoring the information below can seriously hurt
your chances of answering a question correctly. Just be sure to apply the formulas often so
they’re easy to remember and understand!
NUMBER PROPERTIES
Ty p e s o f Num b ers
• Integers: Any counting number, including negative numbers (e.g. -3, 0, 2, 7… but not 2.5)
• Real Numbers: Numbers that appear on the number line including r , 2 , etc. (i.e.,
ones that are not imaginary)
• A positive number is greater than 0; a negative number is less than 0.
• 0 is neither positive nor negative.
O rd e r o f O p erations: PE MDA S
1. Parentheses
2. E xponents
3. Multiplication / Division
4. Addition / Subtraction
Mutiplication/Division and Addition/Subtract are left to right.
2 + 2 # Q5 - 1V
6 2
Example:
2 + 2 # Q4V2
6
6
2 + 2 # 16
2 + 48
50
You can remember PEMDAS as “Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally,” or “Purple Eggplants Make
Delicious Afternoon Snacks,” or my personal favorite, “Pandas Explore Many Delightful Asian
Scenes”
The Commutative and Associative properties do not work with subtraction or division.
NUMBER PROPERTIES
Pr i me N u m b ers
A prime number is one that is divisible only by itself and 1. In other words, a positive integer
with exactly two positive divisors. This includes 2, 3, 5, 7, and 11, but not 9, because 9 = 3 × 3.
• 1 is not a prime.
• 2 is the smallest prime and the only even prime.
• 0 and negatives aren’t prime.
• Memorize all primes below 20: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19
Fa c to r i z ation
If x can be multiplied by y to get z, assuming all of these are positive integers, then x and y
are considered factors of z.
• You get the prime factorization of a number by splitting it into the primes that multiply
into it. So for 21, this is 3 × 7; for 60, it’s 2 × 2 × 3 × 5.
• To find the prime factorization you can break the number up one step at a time.
For example, 60 = 30 × 2 = 15 × 2 × 2 = 5 × 3 × 2 × 2.
• To find how many factors 720 has, first find its prime factorization: 24 × 32 × 5. All of its
factors will be of the form 2 a # 3 b # 5 c . Now there are five choices for a (a= 0, 1, 2, 3, or
4), three choices for b (b = 0, 1, or 2), and two choices for c (c = 0 or 1). The total number
of factors is therefore 5 × 3 × 2 = 30. 720 has 30 factors. To generalize, the number of di-
visors of any number is (a+1) × (b+1) × (c+1)... where a, b, and c are the exponents above
the prime factors of the number.
The greatest common factor (aka greatest common divisor) of two numbers is the biggest
factor they share. For example, the GCF of 12 and 30 is 6—it is the biggest divisor they both
share.
• The easiest way to find the GCF is to take the prime factoriztion and multiply all of the
primes that appear in both numbers.
So since 56 = 2 × 2 × 2 × 7 and 70 = 2 × 5 × 7, the GCF is 2 × 7 = 14. If two numbers
share no primes, the GCF is 1.
Le a s t Co mm on M ultip le
The least common multiple of two numbers is the smallest positive integer with both num-
bers as a factor. The LCM of 4 and 6 is 12—it is the smallest number that has both 4 and 6 in
its divisors. Similarly, the LCM of 9 and 15 is 45; the LCM of 7 and 21 is 21, because 21’s factors
are 1, 3, 7, and 21.
NUMBER PROPERTIES
• To find the LCM of any two numbers, take the prime factorization of each number, find
what prime factors appear in both lists, then multiply the shared prime factors by those
primes that aren’t shared in each list.
So for example, 12 = 2 × 2 × 3, and 56 = 2 × 2 × 2 × 7, so we first notice that both lists
share 2 × 2. Then, we multiply that by the numbers that aren’t shared from each: 3 from
12’s prime factors and (2 × 7) from 56’s primes factors. That’s (2 × 2) [shared] × (3) [un-
shared] × (2 × 7) [unshared] = 2 × 2 × 3 × 2 × 7 = 168.
• The largest possible LCM for any two numbers is one number multiplied by the other.
Divisibility
Fa s t Fra c tions
1 1 x+y 1 1 2+5 7
x + y = xy $ 2 + 5 = 2 # 5 = 10
Ab s o l u te Values
The absolute value of a number is its distance from zero on the number line.
For any positive x…
|x| = x, |-x| = x
And for any negative x…
|x| = -x, |-x| = -x
…since -x would represent a positive number (the negative of a negative). Remember that x
is negative to begin with it, so in order to make x positive we actually have to have -x.
NUMBER PROPERTIES
Pe rce nt ages
• If the price of something goes from $40 to $52, the percent change is
Q52 - 40V 12 3 30
40 = 40 = 10 = 100 = 30% . The price increases by 30%.
• This can also be written as (change x 100) / original value. So here, it’s
Q52 - 40V # 100 1200
40 = 40 = 30% .
• If something increases by 20%, then decreases by 5%, it is not the same as if it in-
creased by 15%. For example: 100 -> 120 -> 114, whereas if 100 increased by 15% it
would be 115.
• Let's say we know the percent that something went down and want to know the new
value. We change the percent into a decimal and subtract it from 1. For example, if a
price dropped by 15%, we would do the following: 1 - .15 = 0.85. Now we take the new
price and multiply it by 0.85.
• 250% of the original price is the same as 150% more than the original price, and to
find either you’d multiply the original price by 2.5.
R at i o s
Ratios let us compare the proportions of two quantities. If there is a 2:5 ratio of boys to girls
at a school, that means that for every 5 girls, there are 2 boys. So there could be 2 boys and 5
girls, 20 boys and 50 girls, 200 boys and 500 girls, etc.
• Ratios are given as x:y, x to y, or x/y. If a question says “for every x there is/are y,” you are
most likely dealing with a ratio question.
• Ratios can be simplified like fractions. 3:6 is the same as 1:2.
• Ratios can also be in three parts, as in x:y:z.
NUMBER PROPERTIES
• To combine ratios, create a common term. For example, 2a:3b and 2b:3c can be com-
bined by converting the b term to 6b, which works well in either ratio— 4a:6b and
6b:9c preserve both relationships, but now they can be combined into 4a:6b:9c. This
also tells us that the ratio of a to c is 4a:9c.
• Remember that if there is a 2:5 ratio of boys to girls at a school, the ratio of boys to total
students is 2:(5 + 2) = 2:7. 2/7 of the students are boys.
1. If k is an integer, what is the smallest possible value of k such that 1040k is the square of
an integer?
a. 2
b. 5
c. 10
d. 15
e. 65
2. A retailer purchases shirts from a wholesaler and then sells the shirts in her store at a re-
tail price that is 80 percent greater than the wholesale price. If the retailer decreases the
retail price by 30 percent, this will have the same effect as increasing the wholesale price
by what percent?
a. 26
b. 37.5
c. 42
d. 44
e. 50
3. In a certain town in Connecticut, the ratio of NY Yankees fans to NY Mets fans is 3:2, and
the ratio of NY Mets fans to Boston Red Sox fans is 4:5. If there are 300 baseball fans in the
town, each of whom is a fan of exactly one of those three teams, how many NY Mets fans
are there in this town?
a. 75
b. 80
c. 90
d. 120
e. 133
NUMBER PROPERTIES
An s we r s and E xp lanat ions
Click the play button for a video explanation.
1. Answer: e. 65
1040 = 2 # 2 # 2 # 2 # 5 # 13
1040k = 2 # 2 # 2 # 2 # 5 # 13 # k
1040k = Q2 # 2 # 5 # 13VQ2 # 2 # kV
k = 5 # 13
k = 65
2. Answer: a. 26
Wholesale Retail Reduced
+80% -30%
$100 $180 $126
+$80 -$54
$100 $ $126 = 26% increase
3. Answer: b. 80
The ratio of iniquitous Yankees fans to pure-hearted Mets fans is 3:2, and the ratio of
these same noble Mets fans to the misguided Red Sox fans is 4:5. (The author acknowledg-
es no preferences in this description.) We need to combine these into one ratio, but in order
to do that, we need to make the common term, Mets fans, equal in both.
Fortunately, Mets fans are represented by 2 in the first ratio and 4 in the second ratio, so
we just have to multiply the first ratio by two—a 3:2 ratio is the same thing as a 6:4 ratio.
Now we can combine these into a single 6:4:5 ratio—6 parts Yankees fans, 4 parts Mets
fans, and 5 parts Red Sox fans. That's a total of 15 parts in the whole population. Well,
there are 300 baseball fans, and if that's 15 parts, each part is worth 300/15 = 20 fans. The
Mets fans comprise 4 parts, or 4 × 20 = 80 fans, answer = b. Fewer than the fans of the
other two, less virtuous teams: many are called, few are chosen.
Notation:
25 = 2 # 2 # 2 # 2 # 2 = 32
x3 = x#x#x
4x = 4 # 4 # 4... (x multiples of 4)
x1 = x
Exponent Laws:
RA+ BW
• xA # xB = x
xA
• xB = x
A-B R W
Qx AV = x RA+
B
• BW
1 and 0 as bases:
• 1 raised to any power is 1.
• 0 raised to any non-zero power is 0.
• Any non-zero number to the power of 0 is 1:
70 = 1
54 0 = 1
5 # Qx 0V = 5
Fractions as exponents:
xS 2 X = x
1
•
xS 3 X = 3 x2
2
•
Negative exponents:
R1
• x -1 = x W
• x -2 = Qx12V
R W
Negative bases:
• A negative number raised to an even power is positive.
• A negative number raised to an odd power is negative.
Q- 2V4 = Q- 2VQ- 2VQ- 2VQ- 2V = 16
Q- 2V5 =- 32
Odd/even exponents:
x 3 = 8 $ x = 2, but x 4 = 16 $ x = 2 and x =- 2
To raise 10 to any power, just put that many 0s after the 1: 105 = 100000, a 1 with 5 zeros.
• 3
n = a number that, when cubed, equals n. 3
-8 = - 2 .
Simplifying roots:
• Separate the number into its prime factors, and take out matching pairs:
20 = 2 # 2 # 5 = 2 5
Adding and Subtracting Roots:
46 - 45
1. 3 =
4
a. 3
b. 4 4/3
c. 4 4 - 4 5/3
d. 4 5 - 4 4
e. 4 5
Qk 3 # k # k 4 V
2
1. Answer: e. 4 5
46 - 45 4 5 Q4 1 - 1V
3 = 3
46 - 45 4 Q3V
5
3 = 3
46 - 45
3 =4
5
2. Answer: b. 1
Qk 3 # k 1 # k 4 V
= k 14 Qx aVQx bV = x a + b
2
kn # k1
Qk 8V
2
= k 14 Qx aV = x ab
b
k n+ 1
k 16 xa
k n + 1 = k xb = x
14 a-b
Rn+ 1W
k 16 - = k 14 xa = xb $ a = b
16 - Qn + 1V = 14
15 - n = 14
n=1
ALGEBRA
S i m p l i f y ing E xp ressions
Simplifying expressions:
• Q6xy + 5xV - Q4xy - 3yV = 2xy + 5x + 3y
Multiplying monomials:
• Q5y 3VQ6y 2V = 30y 5
• - 6y Q5x + 3yV = - 30xy - 18y 2
FOIL (First, Outer, Inner, Last):
• Qx + 2VQx + 7V = Qx # xV + Qx # 7V + Q2 # xV + Q2 # 7V = x 2 + 9x + 14
Common patterns to memorize:
Qa + bV = a 2 + 2ab + b 2
2
•
• Qa 2 - b 2V = Qa + bVQa - bV
Qa - bV = a 2 - 2ab - b 2
2
•
Fa c to r i n g
2 Qx 2 - 16V = Qx + 4VQx - 4V = x + 4
2x 2 - 32 =
• The above example is only possible if x ≠ 4 and x ≠ -4
ALGEBRA
S o l v i n g Eq uations
The golden rule of solving equations is that what you do to one side of an equation, you must
also do to the other.
Eliminating fractions:
S b XS a X = 1
a b
•
2 5 2 5
• 5 x = 8 $ 2 # 5 x = 2 # 8 $ x = 20
Multiply by the LCD:
3x 1 x 36x 12 12x 6
• 4 + 2 = 3 $#12 $ 4 + 2 = 3 $ 9x + 6 = 3x $ x =- 5
Cross-multiplication:
a c
• b = d $ ad = bc
6x - 6 = 2x + 2 $ 3 Q6x - 6V = 7 Q2x + 2V
7 3
•
Quadratic equations:
• For ax 2 + bx + c , where a is not 0, if you can factor it to Qx + yVQx - zV , then the solutions
are -y and z. For example:
x 2 - 7x =- 10
x 2 - 7x + 10 = 0
Qx - 2VQx - 5V = 0
Qx - 2V = 0
x =- 2
or
Qx - 5V = 0
x=5
x = 2 or x = 5
Two variables/systems of equations:
For example: 3x + y = 17 and 2x - 2y = 6
• Method 1: Substitution
y = 17 - 3x
2x - 2 Q17 - 3xV = 6
2x + 6x - 34 = 6
x=5
ALGEBRA
• Method 2: Elimination
6x + 2y = 34
2x - 2y = 6
add the two equations, so +2y and -2y eliminate each other
8x = 40
x=5
• A system of two equations with two unknowns can have 0, 1, or infinite solutions.
• To solve a system of three equations with three variables, use substitution to reduce the
problem to two equations with two variables, and solve from there.
Fu n c t i o n notation
• If given f QxV = ... and asked what f(something else) is, simply replace every instance of x in
the “…” expression with whatever is now in the parentheses.
• For example, let’s say you have f QxV = x 2 - 4 . If asked the value of f Q- 2V , then
f Q- 2V = - 2 2 - 4 = 2 2 - 4 = 4 - 4 = 0 .
• Follow the same process for “strange operators”—symbols you don’t know.
• Say the example includes xDy and you’re asked what aD2x is: just replace “x” and “y”
with “a” and “2x.” So if xby = 3x + y 2 , then 5b2 = 3 Q5V + Q2V2 .
I n e q u a l i t ies
• They can be treated like regular equations, with the following exception: multiplying or
dividing an inequality by a negative number reverses the sign of the inequality.
• x 1 1 $- x 2 1
• If w 1 x 1 y , then break it up into w 1 x and x 1 y .
• In that case, we also know that w 1 y .
• If a 1 b and c 1 d , then a + c 1 b + d . However, this does not hold for subtracting,
multiplying, or dividing.
• If x 1 3, then - 3 1 x 1 3; if x 2 3, then x 2 3 or x 1- 3.
ALGEBRA
Pra c t i ce Q uest ions
For answers and explanations, click a multiple choice option or scroll to the next page.
3. If 2x - 3y = 6, then 6y - 4x =
a. -12
b. -6
c. 6
d. 12
e. Cannot be determined
ALGEBRA
An s we r s and E xp lanat ions
Click the play button for a video explanation.
1. Answer: b. 2
f QxV = x 3 - 5
f Qk V = k 3 - 5
3 = k3 - 5
8 = k3
2=k
2. Answer: e. 12
2x 2 - 20x - 48 = 0
2 Qx 2 - 10x - 24V = 0
2 Qx - 12VQx + 2V = 0 x - 12 = 0 $ x = 12
x + 2 = 0 $ x = - 2
3. Answer: a. -12
2x - 3y - 6
4x - 6y = 12 If a - b = c then b - a = - c
- 4x + 6y = - 12
6y - 4x = - 12
a. 2y - 3x = Q- 1V - Q- 2V = 1
b. 3x - 2y = Q- 2V - Q- 1V =- 1
c. -Q3x - 2yV = - QQ- 2V - Q- 1VV = 1
d. -Q3x + 2yV = - QQ- 2V + Q- 1VV = 3
e. 0 = 0
GEOMETRY
An g l e s
Po l yg o n s
A polygon is any figure with three or more sides (e.g., triangles, squares, octagons, etc.).
• total degrees = 180 Qn - 2V , where n = # of sides
Tr i a n g l e s
1
• area = 2 b # h
• Side a + Side b 2 Side c
• Side a - Side b 1 Side c
• Any given angle of a triangle corresponds to the length of the opposite side. The larger
the degree measure of the angle, the larger the length of the opposite side.
• A right triangle has a right angle (a 90 degree angle); the side opposite the right angle is
called the hypotenuse and is always the longest side.
• For a right triangle with legs a and b and hypotenuse c: a 2 + b 2 = c 2 . This is called the Py-
thagorean Theorem.
• Certain right triangles have sides with all integer lengths. These sets of numbers are called
Pythagorean triples, and you should memorize some of them: 3-4-5, 5-12-13, and 8-15-
17. A multiple of a Pythagorean triple is also a Pythagorean triple (e.g., 6-8-10).
• A 45˚-45˚-90˚ triangle has sides in a ratio of x : x : x 2 , with x 2 as the hypotenuse.
x 2
x
GEOMETRY
• This is also categorized as an isosceles triangle. A 30˚-60˚-90˚ triangle has sides in a ratio
of x : x 3 : 2x, with the 1x side opposite the 30 degree angle and 2x as the hypotenuse.
60˚
2x
x
30˚
x 3
• An equilateral triangle has three equal sides. Each angle is 60 degrees.
Pa ra l l e l o gram s
Squares:
• Perimeter = 4s , where s = side
• Area = s 2
• A line drawn from one corner of a square to its opposite will create two 45-45-90 triangles.
45˚
45˚
45˚
45˚
• The diagonals of a square bisect each other, forming four 90 degree angles
Rectangles:
• Area = l # w , where l = length and w = width
• Perimeter = 2l + 2w
• A line drawn from one corner of a rectangle to its opposite will create two congruent
(equal) triangles.
GEOMETRY
Others:
• The diagonals of any rhombus bisect one another, forming four 90 degree angles.
• The area of any parallelogram can be found multiplying base x height (the base always
forms a right angle with the height).
Tra p e zo i d s
Base 1 + Base 2
• Area = 2 # height , where bases one and two are the two parallel sides.
3 - D Sh a p es
Ci rcl e s
• Area = rr 2
• Circumference = 2rr
• A circle has 360 degrees.
• An arc is the portion of the circumference of a circle in x degrees of the circle.
x
• Arc length = 360 2rr
x
Length
• A sector is a slice of a circle created by a central angle extending out to an arc. The shaded
region in the circle above is a sector.
x
Area of sector = 360 rr 2
GEOMETRY
Pra c t i ce Q uest ions
For answers and explanations, click a multiple choice option or scroll to the next page.
1. O is the center of the semicircle. If +BCO = 30c and BC = 6 3 , what is the area of tri-
angle ABO ?
B
a. 4 3
b. 6 3
c. 9 3
d. 12 3
e. 24 3 A C
O
2. If the ratio of the volume of cube A to the volume of cube B is 1 to 8, what is the ratio of
the surface area of cube A to the surface area of cube B?
a. 1: 2
b. 1: 2
c. 1: 2 2
d. 1: 4
e. 1: 8
3. A is the center of the circle, and the length of AB is 4 2 . The blue shaded region is a
square. What is the area of the shaded region?
a. 4 Q4 - rV
b. 4 Q8 - rV
8 Q2 - rV
A
c.
d. 8 Q8 - rV
e. 16 Q4 - r V
GEOMETRY
An s we r s and E xp lanat ions
Click the play button for a video explanation.
1. Answer: c. 9 3
B
1 3
60˚
6 3 60˚ 30˚
6 6 2
Area = 4 Q6 2V
3
Area = 4 Q36V
3
Area = 9 3
GEOMETRY
2. Answer: d. 1: 4
Cube B
Cube A
1 Volume = 1 Volume = 8
2
1
1
2
2
Surface area = 6 # Qarea of one faceV Surface area = 6 # Qarea of one faceV
Surface area = 6 # Q1V Surface area = 6 # Q4V
Surface area = 6 Surface area = 24
3. Answer: e. 16 Q4 - r V
r2 + r2 = R 4 2 W
A r 2
4 2 2r 2 = 32
r
r 2 = 16
r = 4 $ side = 8
r B
Shaded area = Square area - Circle area
Shaded area = side 2 rr 2
Shaded area = 82 x # 42
Shaded area = 64 - 16r $ 16 Q4 - r V
COORDINATE GEOMETRY
Li n e s
• Any line can be represented by y = mx + b , where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept.
This is called slope-intercept form.
• The slope of a line is the difference in the y values of a pair of coordinates divided by the
difference in the x values:
Q y 2 - y 1V
Q V
slope = m = x 2 - x 1
• To find the y-intercept, plug in zero for x and solve for y; to find the x-intercept, plug in
zero for y and solve for x.
• An equation like x = 3 is a vertical line at x = 3; an equation like y = 4 is a horizontal line
at y = 4.
• If given two points and asked to find the equation of a line that passes through them, first
find the slope using the above formula, then plug one of the points into y = mx + b and
solve for b.
• The slope of a perpendicular line is the negative reciprocal of the first line.
• For example, if the slope of line A is 3, and line B is perpendicular, then the slope of B
is -1/3.
B
A
y2 - y1
a Qx 1, y 1V x2 - x1 c (x 2, y 1)
COORDINATE GEOMETRY
Q u a d rat i cs
Pra c t i ce Q uestions
For answers and explanations, click a multiple choice option or scroll to the next page.
1. In the xy-coordinate system, line k has slope 1/2 and passes through point (0, 5). Which of
the following points cannot lie on line k?
a. (-10, 0)
b. (8, 9)
c. (3, 6.5)
d. (-2, 2)
e. (-8, 1)
2. In the xy-coordinate system, the distance between the point (0,0) and point P is . Which
of the following could be the coordinates of point P?
a. (4, 7)
b. (4, 10)
c. (5, 6)
d. (6, 2)
e. (20, 20)
COORDINATE GEOMETRY
An s we r s and E xp lanat ions
Click the play button for a video explanation.
1. Answer: d. (-2, 2)
y = mx + b m = slope
b = y intercept
1
y = 2 x+5
a. (- 10, 0) $ 0 = 2 Q- 10V + 5
1
b. (8, 9) $ 9 = 2 Q8V + 5
1
.
.
.
d. (- 2, 2) $ 2 = 2 Q- 2V + 5 = 4
1
2. Answer: d. (6, 2)
P Q x, y V
x2 + y2 = d2
d
y x2 + y2 = d
Q0, 0V
x
x 2 + y 2 = 40 $ x 2 + y 2 = 40
a. Q4, 7V $ 4 2 + 7 2 = 65
.
.
.
d. Q6, 2V $ 6 2 + 2 2 = 40
WORD PROBLEMS
Tra n s l at i ng Word Prob lem s into Equ atio n s
Be especially careful to follow the logical order of the word problem when creating an equa-
tion. Below you will find words that are associated with a specific type of mathematical op-
eration.
Addition Multiplication
• the sum of • the product of
• the total of • ___ times as many
• combined with • of
• increased by Division
• and
• per / a
Subtraction • out of
• the difference between • numerator = the top number
• less than / fewer than • denominator = the bottom number
• decreased by
• distance
time = rate
total distance traveled
• average speed = total time
• Average speed is not found by averaging two speeds.
Wo rk R ate
1 1 1
• TotalWork = WorkRate 1 + WorkRate 2
• output = rate # time
S e q u e n ces
Arithmetic Sequences:
• Follow the pattern of a, a + d, a + 2d, a + 3d, …, a + Qn - 1V d
• For example: 3, 7, 11, 15, 19, 23, 27
• The value of term n is a + Qn - 1V d
WORD PROBLEMS
• To find the sum of an arithmetic sequence, add the first and nth terms, multiply by n,
then divide by two.
Q"3 + 27% # 7V Q30 # 7V 210
º The sum of the example above is 2 = 2 = 2 = 105
Geometric Sequences:
Rn- 1W
• Follow the pattern of a, a # d, a # d 2, a # d 3, …, a # d
• For example: 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, 96, 192
R
• The value of term n is a # d n - 1 W
St at i s t i cs
Average (mean):
total sum
For a set of n numbers: n
55
• E.g., in the list 2, 2, 4, 4, 4, 5, 7, 7, 10, 10 the mean is 10 = 5.5
Median:
The middlemost value when numbers are arranged in ascending order; for an even amount
of numbers, take the average of the middle two.
Q4 + 5V
• E.g., in the list 2, 2, 4, 4, 4, 5, 7, 7, 10, 10 the median is 2 = 4.5
• If the numbers in a set are evenly spaced, then the mean and median of the set are equal.
In 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, the mean and median are both 40.
Mode:
The number that occurs most frequently.
• E.g., in the list 2, 2, 4, 4, 4, 5, 7, 7, 10, 10 the mode is 4
Range:
Greatest value – least value
• E.g., in the list 2, 2, 4, 4, 4, 5, 7, 7, 10, 10 the range is 10 - 2 = 8
Weighted average:
QproportionV # Qgroup A averageV + QproportionV # QgroupB averageV + …
• E.g., in a group of 2 girls and 4 boys, if the girls’ average height is 60 inches and the boys’
average height is 66 inches, then the total average is S 2 6 # 60 X + S 6 # 66 X = 20 + 44 = 64
4
• Weighted averages are very rare on the SAT, and the formula isn’t completely necessary.
Just be sure to find any new average using totals; NEVER simply average two averages.
WORD PROBLEMS
Pra c t i ce Q uest ions
For answers and explanations, click a multiple choice option or scroll to the next page.
1. When positive integer x is divided by 11, the quotient is y and the remainder is 4. When
2x is divided by 8, the quotient is 3y and the remainder is 2. What is the value of 13y – x ?
a. -4
b. -2
c. 0
d. 2
e. 4
2.
Number
Score of students
40 1
55 2
70 3
x 4
Ten students took a test, and the distribution of scores is shown on the frequency table. If
the average (arithmetic mean) score is 62, what is the value of x ?
a. 62
b. 65
c. 71
d. 76
e. 83
WORD PROBLEMS
An s we r s and E xp lanat ions
Click the play button for a video explanation.
1. Answer: d. 2
2x ' 8 = 3y Q2V $ 24y + 2 = 2x 24y = 2x =- 2
x ' 11 = y Q4V $ 11y + 4 = x - 11y - x = - 4
13y - x = 2
2. Answer: b. 65
Number
Score of students
40 1
55 2
70 3
x 4
COUNTING
Fu n d a ment al Count ing Principle
Fa c to r i a l Notation
n! = n # Qn - 1V # Qn - 2V # … #3 # 2 # 1
• n unique objects can be arranged in n! ways. Example: There are 9 unique letters in the
word "wonderful", so we can arrange its letters in 9 # 8 # 7 … = 362,880 ways.
R e s t r i c t i o ns
• (Number of ways to follow a rule) = (number of ways ignoring the rule) - (number of ways
to break the rule)
Co mb i n at ions
n!
nC r = r ! Q n - r V !
• When the order does not matter—for example, picking any 3 friends from a group of 5.
Pe r m u t ations
n!
Q V
•
nP r = n - r !
• When the order does matter. For example, how many ways you could you order 3 letters
from the word PARTY? The formula for permutations is very similar to combinations; we
just remove the r! from the denominator.
5!
5C 3 = Q 5 - 3V ! = 60
•
COUNTING
Pra c t i ce Q uest ions
For answers and explanations, click a multiple choice option or scroll to the next page.
2. The probability is 0.6 that an “unfair” coin will turn up tails on any given toss. If the coin
is tossed 3 times, what is the probability that at least one of the tosses will turn up tails?
a. 0.064
b. 0.36
c. 0.64
d. 0.784
e. 0.936
COUNTING
An s we r s and E xp lanat ions
Click the play button for a video explanation.
1. Answer: d. 6
15! = 1 # 2 # 3 # 4 # 5 # 6 # 7 # 8 # 9 # 10 # 11 # 12 # 13 # 14 # 15
15! = 1 # 2 # 3 # 4 # 5 # 6 # 7 # 8 # 9 # 10 # 11 # 12 # 13 # 14 # 15
15! = 1 # 2 # 3 # 4 # 5 # Q3 # 2V # 7 # 8 # Q3 # 3V # 10 # 11 # Q3 # 4V # 13 # 14 # Q3 # 5V
15! = 3 6 Q1 # 2 # 4 # 5 # 2 # 7 # 8 # 10 # 11 # 4 # 13 # 14 # 5V
2. Answer: e. 0.936
P QtailsV = 0.6 $ P QheadsV = 1 - 0.6
P QtailsV = 0.6 $ P QheadsV = 0.4
P Qat least 1tailsV = 1 - P Qno tailsV
P Qat least 1tailsV = 1 - P Qall headsV
P Qat least 1tailsV = 1 - P QH 1 and H 2 and H 3V
P Qat least 1tailsV = 1 - "P QH 1V # P QH 2V # P QH 3V%
P Qat least 1tailsV = 1 - "0.4 # 0.4 # 0.4%
P Qat least 1tailsV = 1 - ".064%
P Qat least 1tailsV = 0.936
FAQ: Isn't the probability of at least one tails (0.6)(0.4)(0.4) + (0.6)(0.6)(0.4) + (0.6)
(0.6)(0.6)? What am I missing?
A: The basic thinking is correct, but there are actually more than 3 cases here which would
satisfy our requirement for at least one tails. (H = heads, T = tails):
One tails: THH, HTH, HHT
Two tails: TTH, THT, HTT
Three tails: TTT
Now we need to analyze the probability for each of these cases and add them:
THH = (0.6 × 0.4 × 0.4) = .096 HTH = (0.4 × 0.6 × 0.4) = .096
HHT = (0.4 × 0.4 × 0.6) = .096 TTH = (0.6 × 0.6 × 0.4) = .144
THT = (0.6 × 0.4 × 0.6) = .144 HTT = (0.4 × 0.6 × 0.6) = .144
TTT = (0.6 × 0.6 × 0.6) = .216
When you add all of those up, you get 0.936 as your answer. Of course, this is much more
complicated than noting that there's only one possible scenario in which NO tails are
flipped (HHH), finding that probability and then subtracting it from 1.
PROBABILITY
Pro b a b i l it y of Event A
P Q AV =
number of outcomes where A occurs
• total number of outcomes
• P Q A and BV = P Q AV # P Q BV
• For example, if given a deck of cards, the probability of drawing a heart, returning that
card to the deck, then drawing a heart again.
• P Q A and BV = P Q AV # P Q B ; AV
• P Q B ; AV is the probability that B occurs given that A occurs.
• If given a deck of cards, the probability of drawing a heart, keeping that card outside
the deck, then drawing a heart again.
• The probability of a point lying within a specific region of a figure is the fraction of the
total area which that region takes up.
For example,
PROBABILITY
Pra c t i ce Q uest ions
For answers and explanations, click a multiple choice option or scroll to the next page.
1. Each circle has center O. The radius of the smaller circle is 2 and the radius of the larger
circle is 6. If a point is selected at random from the larger circular region, what is the
probability that the point will lie in the shaded region?
1
a. 9
1
b. 6
2 O
c. 3
5
d. 6
8
e. 9
PROBABILITY
An s we r s and E xp lanat ions
Click the play button for a video explanation.
8
1. Answer: e. 9
Area = rr 2
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